Entanglement consumption of instantaneous nonlocal quantum measurements
S.R. Clark, A.J. Connor, D. Jaksch, S. Popescu

TL;DR
This paper investigates the entanglement resources needed for instantaneous nonlocal quantum measurements, showing that only finite entanglement is required but with an extremely unfavorable exponential scaling.
Contribution
It explicitly constructs measurement schemes that use only finite entanglement, providing an upper bound on entanglement consumption for general nonlocal measurements.
Findings
Finite entanglement suffices for instantaneous measurements
Entanglement consumption scales exponentially with system size
Schemes overcome relativistic causality constraints
Abstract
Relativistic causality has dramatic consequences on the measurability of nonlocal variables and poses the fundamental question of whether it is physically meaningful to speak about the value of nonlocal variables at a particular time. Recent work has shown that by weakening the role of the measurement in preparing eigenstates of the variable it is in fact possible to measure all nonlocal observables instantaneously by exploiting entanglement. However, for these measurement schemes to succeed with certainty an infinite amount of entanglement must be distributed initially and all this entanglement is necessarily consumed. In this work we sharpen the characterisation of instantaneous nonlocal measurements by explicitly devising schemes in which only a finite amount of the initially distributed entanglement is ever utilised. This enables us to determine an upper bound to the average…
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